HMAS Lismore


HMAS Lismore Statistics
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HMAS Lismore
Type Australian Minesweeper (Bathurst Class)
Laid down 26 February 1940
Launched 10 August 1940 by Mrs Muirhead-Gould, wife of the Commodore-in-Charge, Sydney
Builder Mort's Dock and Engineering Co Ltd, Sydney
Commissioned 24 January 1941
Displacement 650 tons
Length 186 feet56.693 m
5,669.28 cm
0.0567 km
0.0352 mi
2,232 in
Beam 31 feet9.449 m
944.88 cm
0.00945 km
0.00587 mi
372 in
Draught 8 feet 6 inches
Armament
  • 1 x 4-inch gun
  • 3 x Oerlikons (later 4, later 2)
  • 1 x 2-pounder gun (later)
  • Machine guns
  • Depth charges chutes and throwers
Main Machinery
  • Triple expansion, 2 shafts
Horsepower 1,750
Speed 15 knots7.717 m/s
27.78 km/h
0.00772 km/s
1,519.029 ft/min
25.317 ft/s
Complement 85

HMAS LISMORE was one of sixty Australian Minesweepers (commonly known as corvettes) built during World War II in Australian shipyards as part of the Commonwealth Government's wartime shipbuilding programme. Twenty (including LISMORE) were built on Admiralty order but manned and commissioned by the Royal Australian Navy. Thirty-six were built for the Royal Australian Navy and four for the Royal Indian Navy.

LISMORE commissioned at Sydney on 24 January 1941 under the command of Lieutenant Commander Stanley H. Crawford MBE RANR(S).

LISMORE departed Sydney for service on the East Indies Station on 21 February 1941 in company with her sister ship HMAS BATHURST. The vessels called at Darwin en route and arrived at Singapore on 26 March. On completion on 7 April of boiler cleaning and minor repairs, the ships took up duty on anti-submarine patrols off Singapore. On 26 May they sailed for Suez via Colombo, the Seychelles and Aden. They arrived at Colombo on 3 June. Shortly afterwards the ships sailed to take up duty with the Red Sea Force.

Thereafter, until mid December 1941, LISMORE was employed on East African coastal patrol duty which included, from August to December 1941, patrols in the Gulf of Tadjoura as a unit of the forces employed in maintaining a blockade of French Somaliland. On 16 December 1941 LISMORE detached from the Red Sea Force and proceeded for Colombo to join the Eastern Fleet for Indian Ocean escort duty.

From January 1942 to April 1943 LISMORE served as an escort vessel for Indian Ocean convoys including duty in the Persian Gulf area in the second half of 1942. On 3 May 1943 she arrived at Aden en route for the Mediterranean where with her sister ships HMA Ships GAWLER, IPSWICH and MARYBOROUGH, she formed the 21st Minesweeping Flotilla. Her service in the Mediterranean, however, was mainly confined to escort duty. She once, in August 1943, proceeded into the Atlantic to form part of the escort of an Alexandria bound convoy. Despite numerous air attacks in the Mediterranean en route to the Atlantic the ship escaped damage.

HMAS Lismore alongside HMAS Maryborough, Tripoli 1943.

On 25 September 1943 LISMORE departed Suez for Kilindini to rejoin the Eastern Fleet for further Indian Ocean escort duty. For the following fifteen months she was almost constantly at sea protecting convoys moving between India and Africa.

On 3 December 1944 LISMORE arrived at Fremantle, her first call at an Australian port since leaving Darwin for Singapore on 20 March 1941. Her absence from Australia was longer than that of any other Royal Australian Navy ship of World War II.

On 2 January 1945 LISMORE returned to Sydney after an absence of nearly four years (1,409 days). She had steamed some 156,000 miles since commissioning. At Sydney LISMORE joined the British Pacific Fleet (as a unit of the 21st Minesweeping Flotilla, recently constituted as a part of that Fleet) and until hostilities ended served as an escort vessel for shipping moving north to the forward areas including the Philippines. She was one of the Royal Australian Navy ships which participated in the invasion of Okinawa (March to June 1945).

Ship's crew onboard HMAS Lismore

Following the cessation of hostilities LISMORE served for several months in the Darwin, Timor and Moluccas areas before returning to Sydney in March 1946. On 1 June 1946 the ship sailed for Ceylon for transfer to the Royal Netherlands Navy. She paid off at Trincomalee on 3 July 1946. The same day she commissioned as HNMS BATJAN having steamed 191,132 miles as a unit of the Royal Australian Navy.

The ship was classified in the Royal Netherlands Navy as a frigate. She was removed from the effective list in 1958.

Further Reading

  1. H.M.A.S. Lismore: An Australian Corvette by Ron Brennan © Ron Brennan 1988
Australian Navy Cadets from TS MERSEY, Devonport, Tasmania undergoing a sea familiarization voyage...

Australian Navy Cadets from TS MERSEY, Devonport, Tasmania undergoing a sea familiarization voyage...